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Page "Judicial functions of the House of Lords" ¶ 13
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doctrine and Parliamentary
In the famous Factortame case, the House of Lords ( Lord Bridge ) has interpreted this provision as inserting an implied clause into all UK statutes that they shall not apply where they conflict with European law, in what was seen as a major departure from the English constitutional doctrine of Parliamentary Sovereignty ( see Factortame: Sovereignty and the EU ).
Whatever Coke's meaning, after an initial period of application, Bonham's Case was thrown aside in favour of the growing doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty.
Parliamentary sovereignty is now the universally-accepted judicial doctrine in England and Wales.
Further, the Government pointed out that, even if the election of Scottish peers were entrenched, Parliament could amend the provision under the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty.
It was further pointed out by the Government that, even if the election of Scottish peers were entrenched, Parliament could amend the provision under the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty.
In the United Kingdom, the doctrine applies to all members of the government, from members of the cabinet down to Parliamentary Private Secretaries.
In Britain under the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty, the legislature can ( in theory ) pass such retrospective laws as it sees fit, though article 7 of the international convention on human rights, which has legal force in Britain, forbids conviction for a crime which was not illegal at the time it was committed.
With the doctrine of Parliamentary supremacy firmly established in British law, it became possible for Parliament to pass legislation to determine who would act as regent during the absence, incapacity or minority of the ruling monarch.
Whatever Coke's meaning, after an initial period when his decision enjoyed some support ( but during which no statutes were declared void ), Bonham's Case was thrown aside in favour of the growing doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty.
Parliamentary sovereignty is now the universally accepted judicial doctrine in the legal system of England and Wales.
William Blackstone, whose comments in the Commentaries on the Laws of England saw Parliamentary sovereignty overtake Coke's doctrine
With the growth of Parliamentary sovereignty as a doctrine, Coke's theory gradually died out ; William Blackstone, in the first edition of his Commentaries on the Laws of England, wrote that " if the parliament will positively enact a thing to be done which is unreasonable, I know of no power that can control it: and the examples alleged in support of this sense of the rule do none of them prove, that where the main object of a statute is unreasonable the judges are at liberty to reject it ; for that were to set the judicial power above that of the legislature, which would be subversive of all government ".

doctrine and sovereignty
One of the primary reasons that the Israeli constitution remains unwritten is the fear by whatever party holds power that creating a written constitution, combined with the common-law elements, would severely limit the powers of the Knesset ( which, following the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty, holds near-unlimited power ).
Calvin was influenced by the Augustinian tradition, which led him to expound the doctrine of predestination and the absolute sovereignty of God in salvation of the human soul from death and eternal damnation.
Already situated just inside a state bitterly divided on the issue of slavery, southern sympathizers in the area immediately recognized the threat posed by neighboring Kansas petitioning to enter the Union under the new doctrine of popular sovereignty.
The majority rejected the traditional feudal development of the doctrine of tenure as inappropriate for Australia, and rather saw that upon acquisition of sovereignty the Crown acquired not an absolute but a radical title, and that title would be subject to native title rights where those rights had not been validly extinguished.
With his doctrine that sovereignty is conferred by divine law, Bodin predefined the scope of the divine right of kings.
Alabama is, therefore, entitled to the sovereignty and jurisdiction over all the territory within her limits ... to maintain any other doctrine, is to deny that Alabama has been admitted into the union on an equal footing with the original states ... to Alabama belong the navigable waters and soils under them.
) The new regime therefore seemed well-grounded in the new doctrine of popular sovereignty.
Schneider was a defender of the " constitutionalist " doctrine that the army's role is exclusively professional, its mission being to protect the country's sovereignty and not to interfere in politics.
In the 1840s three interpretations of the Constitutional powers of Congress to deal with slavery in territories emerged: the " free-soil doctrine ," the " Calhoun doctrine ," and " popular sovereignty ".
National sovereignty is the doctrine that sovereignty belongs to and derives from the nation, an abstract entity normally linked to a physical territory and its past, present, and future citizens.
The first clear application of the doctrine of national sovereignty was in the constitutions of the French Revolution ( 1789 – 1799 ); the United States, founded in 1776 had relied more on the theory of popular sovereignty and had been first a confederation and later a federation of the states that retained certain aspects of sovereignty vis a vis the nation.
* Prescription ( sovereignty transfer ), a doctrine in international law about sovereignty over a territory
* Neil MacCormick, who has argued that parliamentary sovereignty is an " exclusively English doctrine ".
In the United Kingdom, ex post facto laws are frowned upon, but are permitted by virtue of the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty.
The doctrine of popular sovereignty directly challenged the former divine right of kings.
This practice of using the seat of sovereignty as the injured party is analogous with criminal cases in the United States, where the format is " the People " or " the State v. " ( e. g. People of the State of New York v. LaValle ) under the doctrine of popular sovereignty.

doctrine and still
* The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints also rejects Trinitarian doctrine, although other churches that are part of the Latter-Day Saint movement still adhere to the Nicene Creed.
As late as the 1840s, and despite Friedrich Wöhler's synthesis of urea in 1828, some chemists still believed in the doctrine of vitalism, according to which a special life-force was necessary to create organic compounds.
In 1539, urged by Pietro Bembo, he visited Venice and delivered a remarkable course of sermons, showing a decided tendency to the doctrine of justification by faith, which appears still more evidently in his Dialogues published the same year.
Though the notion of a German blitzkrieg concept or doctrine survive in popular consciousness and popular literature, and many professional historians also still support the thesis.
" This is called the doctrine of the hypostatic union, which is still held today amongst all Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox Christians, referred to as Chalcedonian Christianity.
Some deists rejected miracles and prophecies but still considered themselves Christians because they believed in what they felt to be the pure, original form of Christianitythat is, Christianity as it existed before it was corrupted by additions of such superstitions as miracles, prophecies, and the doctrine of the Trinity.
According to this doctrine, the gods of Olympus were not supernatural powers still actively intervening in the affairs of men, but great generals, statesmen and inventors of olden times commemorated after death in extraordinary ways.
Pope Martin V, who while still Cardinal Otto of Colonna, had attacked Huss with relentless severity, energetically resumed the battle against Huss's teaching after the enactments of the Council of Constance, seeking to eradicate completely the doctrine of Huss, for which purpose the co-operation of King Wenceslaus had to be obtained ; in 1418, Sigismund succeeded in winning his brother over to the standpoint of the council by pointing out the inevitability of a religious war if the heretics in Bohemia found further protection.
Both " Compartments " still exist, but Abraham's Bosom is now empty, while the other chamber is not, according to this doctrine.
The Petrine Doctrine is still controversial as an issue of doctrine that continues to divide the eastern and western churches and separate Protestants from Rome.
While this is a still rather unsettled doctrine, its application has been settled in a few decided areas.
This is a revolutionary step which posed the basis of modernity ( whose repercussion are still ongoing ): the emancipation of man from Christian revelational truth and Church doctrine, a man that makes his own law and takes its own stand.
The security doctrine still states that " Sweden pursues a policy of non-participation in military alliances ," but permits cooperation in response to threats against peace and security.
In Principles of Political Economy and Taxation Ricardo advanced the doctrine still considered the most counterintuitive in economics:
A decade before the break the king wrote a book in defence of Catholic doctrine for which the Pope rewarded him with the title of Defender of the Faith, a title revoked by the Pope following Henry's break with Rome but still claimed and held by English and, after 1707, British monarchs after being bestowed on the monarch by Parliament.
Roman legal doctrine was lost during the Middle Ages, but claims of universal rights could still be made based on religious doctrine.
It is now generally agreed that his ideas were not far from those that eventually emerged as orthodox, but the orthodoxy of his formulation of the doctrine of Christ is still controversial.
We can all see the evil, but the doctrine of appeasement is still to be heard.
He still has to prove his case in a civil action, unless the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies, as it does in most American jurisdictions.
Initially, support for the United States was high, but by the end of the Bush administration, after seven years of war, anti-Americanism was high and criticism of the Bush Doctrine was widespread ; nonetheless the doctrine still had support among some United States political leaders.
France, still committed to stationary World War I strategies, was completely surprised and summarily overwhelmed by Germany's mobile combined arms doctrine and Guderian's Panzer Corps.
“ To swallow and follow, whether old doctrine or new propaganda, is a weakness still dominating the human mind .”
In England and Wales, where escheat still operates as a doctrine of land law, since the abolition of feudal tenure in 1660 there are no legally recognised feudal overlords to take property on an escheat, so that in practice the recipient of an escheated property is the Crown, under its allodial title.

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